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SCHEME FOR M.E. (Comp. Engg.) (R 2002) University of Mumbai TEACHING SCHEME EXAMINATION SCHEME Lecture Practical / Theory Internal Viva Duration per week Tutorial Marks Assessments Voce of papers per week Marks
3P 3P 3P 3P 3P 15 3P 3P 3P 3P 3P 15 2P 2P 2P 2P 2P 10 2P 2P 2P 2P 2P 10 100 100 100 100 100 500 100 100 100 100 100 500 1000 50 50 50 50 50 250 50 50 50 50 50 250 50 50 100 50 100 150 750 100 100 100 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Total Marks
150 150 150 150 150 750 150 150 150 150 150 750 50 50 100 50 200 250 1850
Parallel Computer Architecture Algorithms and Complexity Object Oriented Analysis & Design Network Protocol & Networking Elective I TOTAL Software Engineering Distributed Operating System Advance Database Management Systems Image Processing Elective II TOTAL Seminar on special topics* Dissertation Seminar TOTAL Pre-Synopsis Dissertation Seminar Dissertation and Viva-Voce TOTAL GRAND TOTAL
Elective I [SEM I] (Any one) [1] Artificial Intelligence [2] Neutral Network and Fuzzy System [3] Data mining & Information Retrieval [4] Cryptography & Networking Security Elective II [SEM II] (Any one) [1] E-Commerce [2] Advanced Systems [3] Advances in Management Information System [4] Wireless Communication and Networks Seminar on Special topics Each candidate should be assigned the seminar topic right in the beginning of the semester, and the student has to do exhaustive literature survey, cases studies etc. which has to be presented at the end of the semester. The student has to be in association with the staff member for conducting the seminar. The student should be present in the seminar in front of the committee consisting of the faculty members of the department and has to be evaluated by the committee combinely. # 1. During the III and IV semester, the student should work full time for his/her Seminar and dissertation work. 2. Student teacher contact hours for dissertation and seminar during III and IV semester will be 2 hours /teacher/week.
Contents:
1. 2. Introduction to parallel processing Parallel Computer Structure. Architecture & Classification schemes. Parallel Processing Application. Memory and input and output systems Memory structure hierarchy. Addressing system for main memory. Virtual memory systems. Memory allocation and management strategies. Virtual memories, cache memories. Management and design criteria. I/O subsystems, Interrupt mechanism. Vector processing requirement.
3. Principles of pipelining and vector processing Pipelining. Instruction and arithmetic pipelines. Principles of designing pipelined processors. Vector processing requirement.
8.
References: 1. Computer Architecture and parallel processing by Kai Hwang and Briggs, Tata Mc-Graw Hill. 2. Computer Architecture by Flynn, Narosa Publication.
References: 1. Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol. 1 By D. Comer (PHI). 2. SNMP, SNMPV2 and CMIP, The Practical Guide to Network Management Standards William Stallings. 3. UNIX Networking Programming By W. Richard Stevens, PHI (1995). 4. Internet Secrets By John R Levine and Carol Barondi, IDG Books. 5. Adventures in UNIX Networking Application programming By Bill Riken etal, John Wiley & Sons.
NETWORK PROTOCOLS AND NEWTWORKING Prerequisite : Fundamentals of Computer Networks at UG Level Contents :
1. TCP/IP : Introduction, Internetworking Concepts and Architecture Models, Internet Addresses, ARP, RARP, Internet Protocols Connection less datagram Routing IP data grams, ICMP, UDP, TCP, DNS, Socket, Telnet, FTP, NFS, TETP, POP Server, SMTP Server. 2. Network Management Fundamentals: N/W monitoring, N/W Control. 3. SNMP family : SNMP N/W management concepts, SNMP management Information Base, Remote N/W monitoring, secure SNMP, SNMP version 2, security of SNMP Version 2. 4. Layer 3 switching, Layer 4 switching.
References:
1. Principles of Artificial Intelligence N.J. Nilsson, Tioga Hill, 1992. 2. Artificial Intelligence Elaince Rich, Mc Graw Hill, 1992. 3. Artificial Intelligence and Design of Expert Systems C.F. Luger & W.A. Stubblefeild, Addison-Wesley.
References:
1. Data Mining Adriaans, Pieter & Dolf zantinge, Addision Weley. 2. Introduction to Data Mining & Knowledge Discovery Edelstein, Herbert A.
References:
1. Artificial Neural NetworksB.Yegnanarayana, PHI, 1999. 2. Introduction to Artificial Neural Systems Jacek M. Zurada, Jaico Publishing House, 2001. 3. Neural Network Simson Haykin, Macmillan Publication, 1994. Neural Network & Fuzzy Logic Applications in C/C++ : Stephen T. Welstead, John Wiley, 1994. 4. Fuzzy Set Theory & its Applications H.J.Zimmermann, Allied Publishers Ltd, 1996.
2. Primmality : Bases, congruences, modular arithmetic, GCDs Euclidian Algorithm, Fermat and Euler theorms, Finding large primes, Pohling-Hellman, RSA. 3. Basic Information theory Entropy : Equivocation, Work factors, Key size VS message size, Redundancy, Unicity distance, Perfect secrecy. 4. Element and Historic Ciphers : Caesar cipher, Transposition and substitution, Polyalphabetic ciphers, Product cipher, DES, IDEA, Exponentation cipher, Cipher modes, Block cipher, Stream cipher, ECB, OFB, CFB, CBC. 5. Public VS Private Key : LFSRs, DiffeHellman key exchange, Mental Poker, Quadratic residues, Obilivious transfer, Zero-knowledge proofs, Authentication methods. 6. One-way cipher : Authentication function, Message digest, MDS, SHA, Kerberos, Privacy-enhanced communication. 7. Privacy : Non-repudiation, digital signatures, Certification hierarchies, X.509.PGP.PKI., Digital Water Making, Digital Cash, Digital voting, Contract signing. 8. Key Management Threshold Schemes : Random Number generation, Key escrow, Key recovery. 9. Introduction to Bio metrics for security: Signature verification, figure print recognition, voice recognition, Iris recognition system.
References :
1. Cryptography and Data Security By D. Denning, Addison-Wesley. 2. RSA securities official Guide to cryptography S Bueert and Stephen Paine. 3. Internet Security Protocols Uyless Black, Pearson Education 4. Internet and Cryptography Richard Smith. 5. Cryptography and Network Security, Principles and Practice William Stalling, Pearson Education.
Text Book
An Integrated Approach to Software Engineering By Pankaj Jalote, Narosa Publication House, 1998.
References :
1. An Introduction to Object Oriented Programming : Timothy Budd, Addison Wesley. 2. Object Oriented Programming Using C++ : Ira Pohl, Benjamin Cummings, 1993. 3. Object Oriented Design & Analysis : Grady Booch, Benjamin Cummin, 1993.
Software Engineering A Practioners Approach : Roger S. Pressman, McGraw Hill. 5. Software Engineering : Sommervillee, 4th Ed, Addison Wesley. 4.
DISTRIBUTED OPERATING SYSTEMS Prerequisite : Course on operating systems at U.G. level Contents :
1. Review of Basic concepts and issues such as process and process life cycle, file management, IPC, Mutual Exclusion and Critical Section Problem, semaphores and Monitors, deadlock, performance issues. 2. Study of Design of UNIX operating systems : process management and control, file management, memory management, IPC, sockets, I/O subsystems, scheduling. 3. Study of Distributed Systems : Basic issues in Design, distributes file systems, NFS, case study of two distributed O.S. such as Windows NT and Mach. 4. Introduction to real time O.S.
Transparency, Autonomy, Distributed query processing, Recovery in distributed systems, Commit protocol, Concurrency control, Deadlock handling. 7. Data warehousing : Evolution, architecture, Online Transaction Processing VS Online Analytical Processing, Star Schemas, Implementation 8. Data Mining. 9. Introduction to advanced data Modeling technique such as temporal, multimedia and deductive databases.
References :
1. Database System Concepts : H.F. Korth, Avi Silberschatz, S. Sudarsgan, Tata McGraw Hill. 2. Database System Design Implementation and Management : Peter Rob, Carlos, Coronel, Galgotia Publishers. 3. Reading in Database Systems : M. Stonebraker, Morgan Kaufmann. 4. Fundamental of Database Systems : R. Elmasri, S.B. Navathe, Benjamin Publishers. 5. Intelligent Databases : Object Oriented, Deductive, Hypermedia Technologies, K. Parasaye, M. Chignell, S. Khoshafian, H. Wong, Wiley. 6. Distributed Database : S Ceri, G Pelagatti, McGraw Hill. 7. Multimedia and Imaging Databases : S Khoshafian, A Brad Baker Morgan Kaufmann. 8. The TSQL2 temporal Query Language. R.T. Shodgrass (ed), Kluwer Academic. 9. Data Warehousing, Data Mining and OLAP, A. Berson, S.J. Smith, McGraw Hill. 10. The Datawarehouse Lifecycle Toolkit : R. Kimball et al, John Wily.
References :
1. The design of UNIX O.S. By Morris Bach(PHI) 2. Modern O.S. By Tannenbaum (PHI publication).
4. Image Transform : Introduction to Fourier transform, DFT and two dimensional DFT, some properties of DFT reparability, translational, periodicity, conjugate symmetry, rotation, scaling, average value, convolution, correlation FFT algorithm, inverse FFT, filter implementation through FFT. 5. Other Transform : Other Separable Image Transform and their algorithms, Walsh Hadamard Transform, Discrete Cosine and Sine Transform, Harr Transform Karhunen Loeve (Hotelling) Transform. 6. Image Enhancement : Contrast Manipulation, Histogram modification, noise cleaning, edge sharpening, Frequency domain methods low-pass and high pass filtering, homomorphic filtering. 7. Image data Compression : Coding redundancy, psycho-visual redundancy, fidelity criteria, MSE, Elements of Information theory, Fundamental coding theorem, Error Free Compression, variable length coding, DPCM, DM, ADM etc. 8. Image Segmentation : Detection of discontinuity, Point Line and Edge detection, Edge linking and Boundary detection, Thresholding, Optional Thresholding, Region Orientation segmentation, region growing and merging, texture analysis, and using texture for Image segmentation. 9. Image Representation and Description: Cain codes polygon approximation, signature, Boundary segments, Boundary description, shape numbers, Fourier descriptors, topological, descriptors, textures, moments, morphology, dilation, erosion, opening and closing, hit or miss transform. 10. Image Restoration.
References :
1. Digital Image processing R.C. Woods (Addison) 2. Fundamentals of Image Processing : Anil K. Jain (PHI). 3. Digital Image Processing : William Pratt (John Wiley) 4. Orthogonal Transform for Digital Signal Processing : N. Ahmed & K. R. Rao (Springer).
References :
1. Electronic Commerce Schneider, Perry, Tompson 2000. 2. Frontiers of E-Commerce R Kalakota & A.B. Whiaston, Pearson Education. 3. E-Commerce, Whitely, TMH.
References :
1. Laudon, K.C and Laudon, J.P. Management Information system : A contempory Perspective Maxwell MacMillan, 1990. 2. OBreien, James A.: Management Information System Managerial End User Perspective, Galgotia. 3. Davis G.B. Olson M.H Management Information System Conceptual Foundation Structures and Development, Davis, G.B. and Olson, McGraw Hill, 2nd Edition, 1985. 4. H. F. Korth, Avi Silberschatz, S. Sudarshan : Database System Concept, Tata McGraw Hill. WIRELESS COMMUNICATION & NETWORKS (WCN) (ELEC II) Cellular system techniques & capacity, radio wave propagation & coverage, modulation formats and efficiency, RF system design, signal processing and coding techniques & multiples access techniques. Cellular telephone systems and the Global Positioning System concepts. Issues in translation with illustrative examples from two existing wireless standards (GSM & WCDMA). Wireless Networking for local access. Wireless local loop technology. Use of development systems for design of wireless applications using Bluetooth frame work. PDA / Mobile handset emulators for common handsets like Nokia, Siemens, Palm -7 etc. BOOKS 1.] Wireless Networked Communications Bates R.J McGraw Hill.1994 2.] Mobile Communications Pearson Education. Schiller,
References :
1. Practical computation and the construction of language processor By Pagan. 2. Object Oriented Complier Design By P.H.I. 3. Parallel logic Programming Technique By Taylor, P.H.I. 4. Object Oriented Complier Constructor By Jim Holmes, P.H.I.
3.] Wireless Communications & Networks William Stallings, Pearson Education. www.db.grussell.org
M.E. (COMPUTERS) SEM III SEMINAR ON SPECIAL TOPICS Each student shall be assigned a topic on which he/ she will do self-study. The work may involve review of literature, laboratory experimental work, development of software, development of model, case study, field data collection and analysis etc. On completion of the work the student shall prepare a report and will give a seminar on the report. The student is expected to spend at least 8 hours a week for this seminar. DISSERTATION SEMINAR Student shall finalize a theme related to Computer engineering and / or Information Technology area for the dissertation work. Student shall prepare a report on the theme outlining importance of the theme of the study, objective, scope of work, methodology & review of literature published in the relevant area. The student shall present a seminar on this report.
M.E. (COMPUTER) SEM IV PRE-SYNOPSIS DISSERTATION SEMINAR Student shall study the problem of dissertation in the light of outcome of STAGE 1 seminar. On completion of data collection, analysis & inferencing the student shall prepare an interim report & shall present a seminar on the work done before the submission of synopsis to the University. DISSERTATION & VIVA VOCE On finalization of the dissertation student shall submit the dissertation report to the University. The student shall have to appear for a Viva-Voce examination for the dissertation.
COMPLIED, TYPED & PRESENTED BY: 1.] Krantivir Rajput 2.] Narayann Rajput